|
Post by AndrewS on May 20, 2020 9:14:32 GMT
walk through trains, allowing standing over the couplers, increases capacity a further 10%. Again, I'd question this. The entire concertina section of the S stock is pretty much unusable for standing in as it moves around too much and there is nothing to hang on to if you can't reach the vertical grab rails near the seats. A car end partition would actually make it easier as there'd be something to lean against.
|
|
Chris M
Global Moderator
Forum Quizmaster
Always happy to receive quiz ideas and pictures by email or PM
Posts: 19,758
|
Post by Chris M on May 20, 2020 10:24:42 GMT
But compare that to the DLR trains where the centre section is over a bogie, so much more stable, and there are grab poles - it need not be unusable space.
|
|
|
Post by t697 on May 20, 2020 11:12:16 GMT
But compare that to the DLR trains where the centre section is over a bogie, so much more stable, and there are grab poles - it need not be unusable space. Indeed, the space over the articulated bogie is not too bad to ride as long as you don't mind the lack of windows. There are reasonable handholds which helps. Remains to be seen whether the same area will be reasonably habitable on the new DLR trains which I understand will be simple bogie coaches non-articulated, hence significantly more intercar movement, particularly at the sharp crossovers on DLR.
|
|
rincew1nd
Administrator
Junior Under-wizzard of quiz
Posts: 10,286
|
Post by rincew1nd on May 20, 2020 18:55:08 GMT
Why wouldn't you just specify the same doors for replacement stock? Unless there is a problem with where the doors (and thus PEDs) are situated on the 96ts it would seem to me to be a total waste of money to charge it for the sake of it. The Siemens trains for each line are not going to be exactly the same anyway. AIUI the issue isn't so much placement as door width. The 96ts has single leaf doors at the car ends, this restricts the number of people able to alight/board thus extending station dwell times. The desire is for the new stock to have all double leaf doors (like the S Stock).
|
|
|
Post by will on May 20, 2020 20:01:21 GMT
Why wouldn't you just specify the same doors for replacement stock? Unless there is a problem with where the doors (and thus PEDs) are situated on the 96ts it would seem to me to be a total waste of money to charge it for the sake of it. The Siemens trains for each line are not going to be exactly the same anyway. AIUI the issue isn't so much placement as door width. The 96ts has single leaf doors at the car ends, this restricts the number of people able to alight/board thus extending station dwell times. The desire is for the new stock to have all double leaf doors (like the S Stock). New trains will in the future move away from traditional design standards. There has always been rolling changes in standards on the tube normally starting with an innovation on one particular stock shifting to the design of others. An example is the innovation of externally hung doors first introduced on the 1992ts. When that became the new design standard is has been a feature of all since introduced featured on the 95/96/09 and S7+8 stocks. The new Piccadilly trains will likely serve as the first of the newest generation of walkthrough double door trains. All trains will more than likely follow this. They will be of a different design according to the NFTL feasibility report "NTfL has identified that it is possible to provide an inter-car gangway by altering the Tube train design to incorporate an articulated configuration with more, shorter carriages. By positioning the vehicle bogies under the ends of two adjoining cars, the relative vertical and lateral movement of the carriage ends is significantly reduced." This is not just about the positioning of doors but a move to a new design of train . The double doors will obviously help handle the crowds if 33-36 TPH that is to be handled by the comparatively older Bakerloo, Central, Piccadilly and W&C lines when compared to the Victoria. The design will also allow trains to travel at higher speeds on all the lines they serve with smaller cars allowing trains to negotiate the tight junctions and bends that exist on the lines they serve. The Jubilee will be no exception.
|
|
rincew1nd
Administrator
Junior Under-wizzard of quiz
Posts: 10,286
|
Post by rincew1nd on May 20, 2020 20:47:07 GMT
They will be of a different design according to the NFTL feasibility report "NTfL has identified that it is possible to provide an inter-car gangway by altering the Tube train design to incorporate an articulated configuration with more, shorter carriages. By positioning the vehicle bogies under the ends of two adjoining cars, the relative vertical and lateral movement of the carriage ends is significantly reduced." This is not just about the positioning of doors but a move to a new design of train . The double doors will obviously help handle the crowds if 33-36 TPH that is to be handled by the comparatively older Bakerloo, Central, Piccadilly and W&C lines when compared to the Victoria. The design will also allow trains to travel at higher speeds on all the lines they serve with smaller cars allowing trains to negotiate the tight junctions and bends that exist on the lines they serve. The Jubilee will be no exception. It is interesting to note that MerseyRail are replacing their traditional three car trains (with corridor connections) with trains made of four shorter car that have articulated wide connections (aka walk-through). MerseyTravel have also specified the trains to have a floor level with the standard platform height and train-based "gap fillers" allowing step and gap free boarding. I would find it disappointing if the trains for TfL aren't similarly accessible.
|
|
|
Post by jimbo on May 21, 2020 1:33:47 GMT
They will be of a different design according to the NFTL feasibility report "NTfL has identified that it is possible to provide an inter-car gangway by altering the Tube train design to incorporate an articulated configuration with more, shorter carriages. By positioning the vehicle bogies under the ends of two adjoining cars, the relative vertical and lateral movement of the carriage ends is significantly reduced." This is not just about the positioning of doors but a move to a new design of train . The double doors will obviously help handle the crowds if 33-36 TPH that is to be handled by the comparatively older Bakerloo, Central, Piccadilly and W&C lines when compared to the Victoria. The design will also allow trains to travel at higher speeds on all the lines they serve with smaller cars allowing trains to negotiate the tight junctions and bends that exist on the lines they serve. The Jubilee will be no exception. It is interesting to note that MerseyRail are replacing their traditional three car trains (with corridor connections) with trains made of four shorter car that have articulated wide connections (aka walk-through). MerseyTravel have also specified the trains to have a floor level with the standard platform height and train-based "gap fillers" allowing step and gap free boarding. I would find it disappointing if the trains for TfL aren't similarly accessible. At a late stage in development it was decided that S stock should provide level access to platforms, and this has generally been achieved with adjustment to track and platforms. This results in larger gaps on curves, and train-based gap fillers were considered but dismissed due to additional points of failure. A trial is planned at Baker Street of a platform based active gap filler, and these are planned for the next generation tube trains at places like Bank (Central). However, it is not considered possible to lower the floor level due to already restricted space, and they will cover the platform edge similar to current trains. The plans for eventual full auto-operation include raising all platforms to the new train heights, as well as PEDs, but that would be sometime in the future!
|
|
|
Post by Chris L on May 21, 2020 10:04:45 GMT
When S stock was introduced there were incidents with people slipping down the narrow gap at what seemed level access platforms.
The firm I was working for at the time received instructions to re-lamp the platform edge lighting at all equipped stations. This was in the belief that passengers were not taking as much care as when they had to step up or down.
|
|
|
Post by orienteer on May 22, 2020 16:23:38 GMT
Japan is now quite advanced in installing PEDs, some on lines with mixed stock. They have designed PEDs which can cope with these dynamically, recognising which type of stock is arriving.
So the existing PEDs on the Jubilee could be replaced with such as these before new stock is introduced, allowing an extended period for the changeover.
|
|
|
Post by Chris L on May 22, 2020 17:24:38 GMT
Japan is now quite advanced in installing PEDs, some on lines with mixed stock. They have designed PEDs which can cope with these dynamically, recognising which type of stock is arriving. So the existing PEDs on the Jubilee could be replaced with such as these before new stock is introduced, allowing an extended period for the changeover. Not without closing the line for quite some time. Having seen the screens being installed on the Crossrail platforms it would not be a simple task. The existing screens would have to removed with all the associated wiring and equipment. Then you start again getting the new screens in place followed by lots of commissioning. Plus all the existing trains would have to be modified as new trains take time to deliver and get into service.
|
|
|
Post by moquette on May 22, 2020 21:32:06 GMT
I can confirm that an awful lot of research work went into door positions, widths, vestibule and standback dimensions on the NTfL design brief and specs - to balance loading & station dwell times along with the engineering desire for shorter car 'units' that could be seen to effectively allow the use of a 'modular' design to suit the subtly different parameters for the various lines it was initially intended for.
The 'window' look - well, yes, it is an aesthetic and visual hint at some of the train architecturer than we knew 'worked' on older stock and that we where concerned we'd 'lost' on newer trains (such as the Vic line). But we were determined it wasn't a 'slavish take' on say the '38-TS.
It was driven by a desire to have smaller and non-curved window glass/units as on, eg the 92-ts, they are expensive and 'complex' to replace with sometimes longer periods OOS than you'd want. Against that we didn't want long, low windows as a) on the surface sections as well as in tube platforms you can't easily see out (although it mitigates somewhat against solar gain) and b) the car interior started to visually appear 'compressed' and so potentially subliminally unwelcoming. One thing we looked at with 'squarer' windows was it was simpler to supply and repair (potentially a cassette system), it gave a more regular rythmn to the train's interior architecture, especially when seen against the seat height, seat back and upstand dimensions and their relationship.
There was also the case that for both body strength and stability, along with the need to have enough vertical space to feed particularly the handled air flow, more 'uprights' may be needed - although this also has to be considered against the dimensions of body pillare adjacent to doorways.
This ain't the place to discuss the S-stock's car lengths/door positions and the fact that it ended up being effectively designed to cause more issues on certain platforms - it always struck me that it was as if some of the basic infrastructure requirements were not factored in or were dismissed by 'oh we can sort that'as if a magic engineering solution to reconstruct Baker St or Farringdon would appear.
PEDs - it was pertinent as to possible Piccadilly line deployment - there were some big ticket issues seemingly developing around such stuff as tube platform constructions and edge weight loadings, full height/half height, just tube not surface platforms and quite how you would manage the mixed fleet utilisation you'd find as you infiltrated new stock in with old. Then again, RATP seem to have managed some slick 'conversions'. Not sure where LU now stand on that issue - the money for the trains is now hard to find, let alone the signalling upgrade that was originally part of the 'package' so PEDS.....
|
|
metman
Global Moderator
5056 05/12/1961-23/04/2012 RIP
Posts: 7,421
|
Post by metman on May 23, 2020 7:11:25 GMT
I think the windows look terrible and although they are a bit of a throw back to the earlier stocks from last century the spacing of the pillars actually reminds me of the pre-1938 stock. I’d be surprised if square edged window are provided as they are known to become stressed on aluminium panels as was displayed on the early aluminium (R49) stock. If the three box windows were replaced by two longer rounded windows it may look better.
The S stock concept drawings had square/angled windows and longer door glazing but this was amended to standard practice in the end.
|
|
|
Post by jimbo on May 23, 2020 7:41:21 GMT
Pretty small car windows, so is the small light fitted above them needed to boost any external light? That will result in uneven lighting in adjoining seats!
|
|
|
Post by norbitonflyer on May 23, 2020 10:05:55 GMT
I’d be surprised if square edged window are provided as they are known to become stressed on aluminium panels as was displayed on the early aluminium (R49) stock. See at e.g 0:49 of the video.. Although the glazing has angled corners it appears to be superimposed on apertures with radiused corners, like the vehicle on the left in this picture of a Class 458 SWR unit.
|
|
|
Post by moquette on May 23, 2020 19:40:40 GMT
Evening all - and yes, as surmised, the window glass panels would not actually be squared off - quite how, with shading/stippling, etc, as used on current stocks, they are presented would be an issue for detailed design with the builders. The 'look' is of course down to individual's aesthetic tastes and reactions; as I mentioned some of the parameters that went into the design proposals were an attempt to consider the whole interior as an holistic environment as we'd become concerned that some of the proportionality and relationships between key elements of the interior could be reconsidered and made to work better.
Re; lighting - the 'back lighting' is there primarily not because of window size as such as in tube sections there's no light anyhow, but we had feedback and evidence that in a crowded tube train (no jokes please) with standing passengers in front of seated ones, deep shadows occur so, if you're seated and say trying to read, the light levels are poor to patchy. The back light is intended to assist this as well as help accentuate the car 'shape'.
|
|
|
Post by jimbo on Jun 3, 2020 4:58:47 GMT
Apologies if this has already been created whats happening with the new stock as im confused as where they were being built either in Germany or here? Current May Underground News has story: Piccadilly Line train production is reported on target to start from August 2021, with the first new train into service from Autumn 2024, and all existing trains replaced by mid-2026. Surprisingly, an official visit to the ‘proposed’ Goole site on 10 March 2020 could only have a group photo before a ‘coming soon’ sign. UK production was part of the deal offered by Siemens to gain the contract for potentially 250 trains for four lines. The pre-production trains were always expected from Europe, with perhaps some early production trains. The Programmes and Investment Committee meeting on 5 March 2020 heard only 50% of the rolling stock would be built in Goole, so only around a year of production for the new factory. Funding for follow on orders for other lines currently looks unlikely! I wonder what has been happening up in Goole. Has there been a 3 month stand still, meaning another 12 trains to be constructed overseas, and only 35 trains left for the new factory? Will this be worthwhile if the balance of train order is no longer expected? The HS2 contract decision is due soon, and I know they are hopeful. Only 94 Picc trains were ordered for 27tph under current signalling , but why not the extra 7 for 33tph and also 8 for eventual 36tph, as 95/96 stock were ordered to meet future signalled capacity. Maybe they could be encouraged by the Government to build Goole with another 40 trains for the Bakerloo and up to 10 estimated for the Waterloo & City. I can't see the Central line trains being ordered for a long while with the 1992TS improvement project about to get underway. This would increase the UK build to 100 trains, about the expected initial Picc order for which Goole was originally intended.
|
|
|
Post by norbitonflyer on Jun 3, 2020 8:47:49 GMT
Maybe they could be encouraged by the Government to build Goole with .........….up to 10 estimated for the Waterloo & City. The W&C only has five trains at present. I doubt there is room for ten - the end to end journey time of less than five minutes implies a headway of about one minute, and/or some very short dwell times at the termini.
|
|
|
Post by retired on Jun 3, 2020 9:30:08 GMT
If 10 trains were on the W&C then there would be stabling implications. Already a train is stabled in the platforms at Bank and Waterloo (1 each) because there is
simply no room in the depot for them all.
Even when the service runs you would be hard pressed to have any more than a train in each platform in Bank and Waterloo and one in "flight" each way. Total of 6 trains plus one reversing in Waterloo Siding. So the one minute headway suggestion would not be far off the mark.
Some years ago when a crackpot scheme was devised to run an excess of trains I suggested that coupling the trains together and having the passengers walk through them would be a faster journey than actually running the service. This did not go down well at all........
|
|
|
Post by nig on Jun 3, 2020 11:45:00 GMT
Current May Underground News has story: Piccadilly Line train production is reported on target to start from August 2021, with the first new train into service from Autumn 2024, and all existing trains replaced by mid-2026. Surprisingly, an official visit to the ‘proposed’ Goole site on 10 March 2020 could only have a group photo before a ‘coming soon’ sign. UK production was part of the deal offered by Siemens to gain the contract for potentially 250 trains for four lines. The pre-production trains were always expected from Europe, with perhaps some early production trains. The Programmes and Investment Committee meeting on 5 March 2020 heard only 50% of the rolling stock would be built in Goole, so only around a year of production for the new factory. Funding for follow on orders for other lines currently looks unlikely! Only 94 Picc trains were ordered for 27tph under current signalling , but why not the extra 7 for 33tph and also 8 for eventual 36tph, as 95/96 stock were ordered to meet future signalled capacity. Maybe they could be encouraged by the Government to build Goole with another 40 trains for the Bakerloo and up to 10 estimated for the Waterloo & City. I can't see the Central line trains being ordered for a long while with the 1992TS improvement project about to get underway. This would increase the UK build to 100 trains, about the expected initial Picc order for which Goole was originally intended. As the picadilly has only 78 trains at peak now on current timetable and can only just cope with that many i assume the 94 trains are for 36tph
|
|
|
Post by jimbo on Jun 3, 2020 12:42:51 GMT
Sorry, 10 trains is from the NTfL Feasibility study back-of-envelope fleet numbers with 40 Bakerloo, and 100 for both Picc and Central to make 250 trains. More sophisticated planning has recently proposed 6 trains to provide 27.5tph W&City service. 94 new Picc trains replace current 86 trains including maintenance cover for 27tph under current signalling. The extra trains required for more frequent service with new signalling are all quoted from the Programmes and Investment Committee meeting of 16 May 2018. content.tfl.gov.uk/pic-20180516-item08-deep-tube-update.pdf
|
|
|
Post by jimbo on Jul 17, 2020 19:59:59 GMT
An economic case for replacement of the Bakerloo fleet has yet to be made, and yet the TfL Programmes and Investment Committee on 20 July 2020 are advised that due to their age, Bakerloo line trains complete a Programme Lift cycle approximately every 15 months, whilst the latest trains only undertake this after ten years! Currently it seems the Bakerloo trains will just continue as heritage trains do, with maintenance as required!
|
|
|
Post by nig on Jul 18, 2020 1:05:08 GMT
Why wouldn't you just specify the same doors for replacement stock? Unless there is a problem with where the doors (and thus PEDs) are situated on the 96ts it would seem to me to be a total waste of money to charge it for the sake of it. The Siemens trains for each line are not going to be exactly the same anyway. On the new stock they want all double doors and no single doors to speed up alighting and boarding times
|
|
rincew1nd
Administrator
Junior Under-wizzard of quiz
Posts: 10,286
|
Post by rincew1nd on Jul 20, 2020 14:23:09 GMT
Could there be a pause in the new stock?
(Embedded tweet above)
|
|
|
Post by 100andthirty on Jul 20, 2020 15:46:49 GMT
Bear in mind that the Bakerloo stock is already 46 years old (service entry in 1974 despite the 1972 tube stock name). Whilst they are of very traditional design and could be kept going on the "Trigger's broom" principle, the day will come when either some very expensive repairs will be required (e.g. the wiring, there will no longer be the skills available to repair key parts (traction motors) or standards will have moved on so much that they will be deemed unsafe. Even if the plan continues unchanged, they will beat the A stock for longevity.
|
|
DWS
every second count's
Posts: 2,487
|
Post by DWS on Jul 20, 2020 16:34:21 GMT
Could the 1973 stock when replaced on the Piccadilly line be used on the Bakerloo line ?
|
|
|
Post by Chris L on Jul 20, 2020 16:54:13 GMT
Could the 1973 stock when replaced on the Piccadilly line be used on the Bakerloo line ? Doubtful because the cars are longer. The 1972 has had a lot of remedial work already.
|
|
metman
Global Moderator
5056 05/12/1961-23/04/2012 RIP
Posts: 7,421
|
Post by metman on Jul 20, 2020 17:02:05 GMT
Agreed the Bakerloo stock has potentially got less mileage on the clock and has had extensive works. It also has more capacity I would imagine too.
|
|
Tom
Administrator
Signalfel?
Posts: 4,196
|
Post by Tom on Jul 20, 2020 21:37:07 GMT
Could the 1973 stock when replaced on the Piccadilly line be used on the Bakerloo line ? Doubtful because the cars are longer. It's not beyond the realms of possibility. Empty trains of 1983 stock certainly ran on the Bakerloo for testing purposes in the 1980s, and they were formed of six 'long' cars similar to the 1973 stock. I'm sure one of our resident rolling stock experts such as t697 or 100andthirty would have a better idea.
|
|
|
Post by 100andthirty on Jul 21, 2020 7:00:40 GMT
The first 1983 tube stock did underscoring on the Bakerloo to check the gauge. This was to ensure clearances for the diversionary route to Elephant and Castle. I don't recall whether the train went to Queens Park though. Longer cars would be an issue at the curved platforms.
Also a 1973 tube stock car has been a regular visitor in the guise of the track recording train.
As others have said, 1973 tube stock is hardly any younger than 1972 tube stock, but has arguably had a harder life.
|
|
|
Post by t697 on Jul 21, 2020 11:22:50 GMT
A 6-car 73TS has a little less passenger capacity than 7-car 72TS. Platform/Train gaps would be slightly higher at the curved platforms such as Waterloo and others. I don't see much benefit using trains only a couple of years newer than the present ones with both having had fairly hard lives. There might be difficulties getting approvals to run trains new to the line that are arguably worse for DDA compliance. Anyone for new Central line trains and a 7-car conversion of 92TS with added door tread plates for the Bakerloo? No? Thought probably not!
|
|